Texas Jury Orders Company to Pay $96 Million Following Airplane Mishaps

February 16, 2005

A jury in Grimes County, Texas has reportedly found Textron Lycoming liable for fraud, and ordered the company to pay approximately $96 million to Navasota, Texas-based Interstate
Southwest Ltd.

The verdict came Tuesday following seven weeks of trial in State District Judge Jerry Sandel’s 278th Judicial District Court in Anderson.

The jury’s award includes $9,725,650 in actual damages and another
$86,394,763 in punitive damages. In addition, the verdict effectively
precludes Lycoming from pursuing a $173 million indemnity claim against Interstate, which it had previously filed in a Pennsylvania court.

“This is a total victory for our side,” said attorney Marty Rose, who
represented Interstate Southwest. “Between the verdict and its impact on the indemnity claim – we couldn’t have hoped for a better result.”

The case revolves around a number of small airplane engine failures that occurred when the airplanes’ crankshafts reportedly broke in flight.

Between 2000 and 2002, there were 24 failures and 12 deaths in Cessnas, Pipers and other airplanes with Lycoming aircraft engines. Interstate Southwest reportedly supplied Lycoming with the crankshaft forgings for those engines.

Following the failures, Lycoming launched an investigation to find the cause. Its reported finding was that Interstate Southwest had overheated the forgings, weakening the steel. But attorneys for Interstate, Rose, and Hal Walker of Rose Walker in Dallas, found a different cause. Their experts were reportedly able to determine that Lycoming’s design for the crankshafts, which dates back to smaller, lower horsepower engines from 40 years ago, was inadequate for the larger, higher horsepower engines that failed.

They also found that by adding Vanadium to the steel – something Lycoming reportedly decided to do just before the failures began – the company further limited the amount of stress the crankshafts could withstand. Lycoming had reportedly added Vanadium to make the steel harder and reduce the number of machining operations, ultimately saving the company money.

Ultimately, jurors agreed with lawyers for Interstate, and found that even Lycoming’s investigation of the crankshaft failures was reportedly fraudulent.

“The jurors found the combination of poor design and Vanadium pushed these crankshafts beyond their limits,” said Walker. “That’s why these planes crashed, and not, as Lycoming claimed, because Interstate overheated the forgings.”

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